Anonymous wrote:I don't know where to look for care. Any suggestions?
A meal service to drop off food 3 times a week. They can re-heat, but it is difficult for my mom to prepare dinners.
A once a week person to help with self care (bath, wash and style hair)
Someone to come in for 1-2 hours a day or every other day to pick up after them (not clean, she has cleaning lady). Laundry, empty dishwasher, etc.
Anyone else been in this situation that parents still want to remain in home, but can't do it all themselves and working adult children can help some but live too far away to do it everyday?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a SAHM with many elderly neighbors there is no way in HELL I would help them bathe. Absolutely, under no circumstances, ever.
Exactly. People recommending this are the same people that also want SAHMs to watch their kids on snow days and have one way "carpools."
Don’t forget the “college students!” They always want to work crappy jobs for one hour a day.
OP there is a helpful list of things called “Activities of Daily Living” that is used to assess how much care a person needs. It might be helpful for you and your siblings to go through the assessment to have everyone on the same page, and it will be helpful for agencies and care homes.
Two truths:
1) Your mom probably needs more care and help than you think. Your time estimates are wildly optimistic.
2) Budget is everything. If your mom has a lot of wealth, you can hire good people to work at her home. It’s an inefficient labor model, but it can work for the patient. If she doesn’t, you need to look at group facilities or a more exploitative home model, like a live-in person paid poor wages (which is legal in many states because elder care is a crisis and politicians look the other way).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a SAHM with many elderly neighbors there is no way in HELL I would help them bathe. Absolutely, under no circumstances, ever.
Exactly. People recommending this are the same people that also want SAHMs to watch their kids on snow days and have one way "carpools."
Anonymous wrote:As a SAHM with many elderly neighbors there is no way in HELL I would help them bathe. Absolutely, under no circumstances, ever.
Anonymous wrote:This is called companion care and some agencies provide it but require minimums. The minimum I was quoted recently was 18 hours per week (6 hours per shift) for interacting with the senior, light housekeeping, medication reminders, meal preparation type stuff. $30+per hour. I think bathing or other personal care would add to the cost.
As for meals, when one of my parents could still prep meals but was frustrated with thinking up ideas every night and doing the shopping, We used hello fresh so they had everything for 2 dinners per week. sometimes only sent it every other week if we were in town visiting or if they had other plans. It can get pricey but they enjoyed it and they weren’t wasting food. I handled the ordering and everything from afar through the app.